A command line Ruby gem designed to be used with a separately installed saxon processor,
a compatible XSLT transformation package, and a LaTeX processor. This application
assists in the conversation of text transcription to print PDF presentation.

This plugin, implements the LDN-IIIF specifications. It is used to allow research
groups to connect scholarly data with images published by libraries and museums within
the IIIF compliant image viewer known as Mirador. This plugin was co-created with
Régis Robineau of the Biblissima (http://www.biblissima-condorcet.fr/) project located
in Paris.

This application is a web editor to help people create semantically encoded editions
according to the specifications of the Textual Encoding Initiative. It also provides
github integration, allows users to save their texts to github and publish them with
github pages.

Maintained Sites and Web Services

A full text indexer and web search service. This site currently indexes more that
7 million Latin words from contributors throughout the world. This search service
is publicly available for re-use in other applications.

scta.info is both a community hub and web service. It serves data about the scholastic
tradition to sites all around the world according to various APIs (like IIIF, DTS,
and OAI-PMH). Internal and external applications use these APIs to display data from
the SCTA archive in their own applications. SCTA is used in this way by sites likes
e-codices (the Virtual Library of Switzerland), RCS (https://rcs.philsem.unibas.ch/),
Oxford Manifest Editor, Biblissima, the Houghton Library at Harvard University, as
well as the SCTA reading room (http://scta.lombardpress.org), LombardPress-Print (http://print.lombardpress.org)
and the SCTA Image Viewer (http://mirador.scta.info)

This site is an implementation of the Lbp-Print-Web-App co-created with Michael Stenskjær
Christensen of the University of Copenhagen. This site is a place that users can freely
generate on-demand PDF of any text or text fragment within the scholastic corpus.
It is also a web service that allows other applications to make PDFs available to
their users.

In cooperation with the Digital Latin Library and the Medieval Academy of America,
this pilot site is public registry of peer reviewed digitally encoded editions. It
also functions as a web service, allowing other applications to request review information
and display that information to their users. Please see http://lombardpress.org/2016/05/19/the-traveling-imprimatur